Abstract

Stretching has been widely used to increase the range of motion. We assessed the effects of a stretching program on muscle-tendon length, flexibility, torque, and activities of daily living of institutionalized older women. Inclusion/exclusion criteria were according to Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) (>13), Barthel Index (>13) and Lysholm Scoring Scale (>84). Seventeen 67 ± 9 year-old elderly women from a nursing home were divided into 2 groups at random: the control group (CG, N = 9) participated in enjoyable cultural activities; the stretching group (SG, N = 8) performed active stretching of hamstrings, 4 bouts of 1 min each. Both groups were supervised three times per week over a period of 8 weeks. Peak torque was assessed by an isokinetic method. Both groups were evaluated by a photogrammetric method to assess muscle-tendon length of uni- and biarticular hip flexors and hamstring flexibility. All measurements were analyzed before and after 8 weeks by two-way ANOVA with the level of significance set at 5%. Hamstring flexibility increased by 30% in the SG group compared to pre-training (76.5 ± 13.0° vs 59.5 ± 9.0°, P = 0.0002) and by 9.2% compared to the CG group (76.5 ± 13.0° vs 64.0 ± 12.0°, P = 0.0018). Muscle-tendon lengths of hip biarticular flexor muscles (124 ± 6.8° vs 118.3 ± 7.6°, 5.0 ± 7.0%, P = 0.031) and eccentric knee extensor peak torque were decreased in the CG group compared to pre-test values (-49.4 ± 16.8 vs -60.5 ± 18.9 Nm, -15.7 ± 20%, P = 0.048). The stretching program was sufficient to increase hamstring flexibility and a lack of stretching can cause reduction of muscle performance.

Highlights

  • The Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics [1] has estimated that 8.6% of the Brazilian population (14.4 million) are composed of elderly citizens

  • The stretching program (SG) experienced a hamstring flexibility increase of 30% compared to the values found before intervention (76.5 ± 13.0° vs 59.5 ± 9.0°, P = 0.0002)

  • The active stretching protocol performed only three times per week induced an increase in hamstring flexibility in nursing home women residents

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Summary

Introduction

The Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics [1] has estimated that 8.6% of the Brazilian population (14.4 million) are composed of elderly citizens. According to the Institute, the growth experienced during the last 10 years was of 17% and projections indicate that this population may reach 55.0 million people (27% of the total population) by the year 2040. As the aging population increases so will the number of people living in nursing homes [2]. Physical disability, functional loss and autonomy, psychosocial context, stress, family support, and loss of an identity role in the community cause difficulties in basic daily activities and cognitive skills and increase the risk of falling [2,3,4]. Exercise programs have shown a reduction in the rate of falling and improved balance and mobility [4,6]

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